] In a back and forth yesterday, Sharon Bush, the former ] wife of the president's brother Neil and a central source ] for the book, issued a pre-emptive retraction after a ] British newspaper printed an article on the book, quoting ] Ms. Bush as saying that Mr. Bush used cocaine at Camp ] David while his father was in office. ] ] "I categorically deny that I ever told Kitty Kelley that ] George W. Bush used cocaine at Camp David or that I ever ] saw him use cocaine at Camp David," Ms. Bush said in an ] unsworn statement distributed by her lawyer, David Berg. ] "Although there have been tensions between me and various ] members of the Bush family, I cannot allow this falsehood ] to go unchallenged." ] ] Doubleday, the book's publisher and part of the Random ] House division of Bertelsmann, said it stood by Ms. ] Kelley's reporting. The publisher said in a statement ] that Ms. Kelly met with Ms. Bush for a four-hour lunch on ] April 1, 2003, where an unnamed third party heard the ] conversation, and that Ms. Kelley's editor, Peter ] Gethers, discussed the same material with Ms. Bush over ] the phone. ] ] Lou Colasuonno, a former publicist for Ms. Bush, ] confirmed that he was the third party at the lunch and ] contradicted her denial. "I have not seen the book, I ] have only seen news reports," Mr. Colasuonno said. ] "According to what I have seen, what has been reported, I ] would not dispute that." Book Unflattering to Bush Draws His Campaign's Fire |